Better and Faster than A Bowl of Cold Cereal

Life hasn't been easy since Snack-Girl set a new cereal standard in our house. I've tested many of our cereals and I've come up with very few that pass the Candy or Breakfast? Evaluate Your Cereal test.

So, what to do? Oatmeal is a great solution to my breakfast dilemma. It is whole grain, no sugar added, and four grams of fiber per 1/2 cup. BUT, who has time to make oatmeal?

There is instant oatmeal, of course, but it doesn't taste as good as old fashioned rolled oats, or steel cut oats. Also, many of the packets have added sugar and flavors that may or may not be delicious. And, it costs more per serving than a regular box of rolled oats.

The solution: Buy a slow cooker and mix your oats and water at night. In the morning, your oats are ready to go! It is SO ridiculously easy and (for you college students out there), you don't even NEED a stove.

Some tips:

Get your hands on some rolled oats or steel cut oats from the bulk section of your supermarket. They are cheaper and more delicious than Quaker (trust me, I have tried them all).

Use a small slow cooker (1.5 - 2.5 quart). I used my large one and it really made a mess to clean up. Picture crusty oatmeal glued to my cooker. The small ones are perfect for this task.

Change what you mix in to your oatmeal. You can get bored with oatmeal if you eat the same thing every day. Add different things and look forward to the meal.

17 Comments:

I don't know what I love more the "candy or cereal" test or the overnight oats, bravo once again. And I think you can make overnight oats sans slow cooker just soaking the oats and then heating in AM...haven't tried but I hear it works.

I love grains for breakfast! On Sundays, I make enough oatmeal for my husband for the week. It reheats really well. For myself, I usually try a different grain each week. My favorite is spelt berries. This week, I have bulgar.

I haven't tried the slow cooker version yet, but often microwave the old fashioned oats with milk & "add ins" for 2-1/2 to 3 minutes - use a fairly large bowl so it doesn't bubble over. My favorite - dried cherries & pecans - YUM!

I'll also have to check out other brands than Quaker.

Mariaon March 22, 2010

I love steel cut Irish Oatmeal - McCann's is the best. Thanks for your great idea and picture.

marilynon March 22, 2010

OR....

Bring to Boil 4c water and 1c steel cut oats in a pan...take off heat and leave on stove overnight. When you get up...just turn heat back on and stir a couple of times until it is warm. Very quick and so so good. I add a ton of extras to it the night before too...walnuts, cinnamon, nutmeg, flaxseeds, dried fruits...yumm-o!

I have regular rolled oats everyday, made on the stove and it takes about ten minutes. Start the water to boil, come back in five minutes, add oats, come back in two minutes to stir, come back in three and stick it in a bowl to cool. Add 1 tbsp brown sugar and crasins, enjoy. It's not much more work than cereal and so much better and much more filling for you.

Thank you so much for this post!! It is AWESOME! I just love reading your site. Thank you for all the time you put forth in doing so.

Theresaon April 5, 2010

I'll need a large pot for a family of 9. However, my favorite product is Slow Cooker Bags by Reynolds (they do the oven bags) for the slow cooker. I use them all the time and there's no clean up!

Donnas7kidson May 19, 2010

I adapted a recipe from the Quaker Oats website to use with my slow-cooker. The recipe below is for the oven; just double the milk or liquid (apple juice?) and cook on LOW overnight or about 8 hours. This is a thicker oatmeal, you could easily add more liquid before cooking and it would be okay.

I love the idea of the slow cooker for oatmeal and agree the quantity might be a bit much. I would then freeze the oatmeal in small containers (3x2 like a cookie). When I wanted to serve, simply turn on the broiler to "toast" your cookie and top with lemon curd. Yum

CSmithon January 27, 2011

Try cooking your oats with half unsweetened almond milk. It adds only a few calories and a ton of creaminess. Thanks for the article! I am going to try making oats in my slow cooker.

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